There’s no question in Boras’ mind that Britton should be the American League Cy Young Award winner. His arguments, although obviously biased, also have legitimacy.

Although there are plenty of starting pitchers in the American League having strong seasons, none is having a runaway campaign. The only qualifier with an ERA under 3.00 is New York’s Masahiro Tanaka.

Britton, however, is doing some things not even the great Mariano Rivera – the game’s greatest closer who never won a Cy Young Award – accomplished.

For one, Rivera never had a perfect save season; Britton is 44 of 44 with two-plus weeks to go. Also, Rivera never had a season in which he finished with an ERA under 1.00. Britton sits at 0.60 in 63 games and 60 1/3 innings.

“It’s a truly historic season,” Boras said of Britton’s 2016. “He’s not only been pitching on an elite level all season, but he’s doing it every night with the game on the line.”

Those high leverage innings need to be weighed equally against the sheer number of innings pitched by starters – who usually get the benefit of the doubt from Cy Young voters.

No other reliever, Boras said, is in “Zach’s World” in 2016 – and this should be one of the rare instances where that dominance is recognized.

By the way, Britton is arbitration eligible for the next two offseasons before becoming a free agent after 2018, and Boras doesn’t see the Orioles making an extension push for him right now.

Alvarez will be a free agent at season’s end and Boras believes he’ll be an attractive free agent coveted by a number of teams. (Yes, he always says that, but more times than not his high-profile clients hit the jackpot in free agency).

Boras says he thinks the Orioles will be in the mix for Alvarez this offseason, especially if they don’t think they can keep pending free agent Mark Trumbo and don’t want to lose their surplus of power.

However, Boras would like to see the left-handed-hitting Alvarez get more playing time against left-handers as this season plays out.

Alvarez has a career slash line of .205/.271/.334 against lefties. But in 2016 he’s slashed .243/.293/.378 in 41 plate appearances against southpaws.

Instead of being moved to the bench against lefties when Trumbo is shifted to the DH role, Boras thinks both should be in there together, lengthening the lineup and keeping it dangerous throughout.

Boras said he agreed with the sentiment of Orioles center fielder Adam Jones’ recent comments about the lack of African-American players in the game. Boras said he doesn’t think Major League Baseball concentrates enough on American players in general, and clubs instead spend a lot of frivolous money on foreign players.

“I think Adam makes a great point,” Boras said. “Many of the great (black) athletes today are going to college football and college basketball. They’re getting full scholarships – baseball’s not giving full rides — and then they’re going pro (in those other sports).”

His argument is that teams are spending more and more big money on players like Cuban professionals and not as much as the industry should on building through the draft.

And that, he said, is limiting the pool of top athletes — and African American athletes — who are seeking out baseball as a career.

1 Comment

bigdaddydk

September 21, 2016 at 3:53 pm

Boras thinks that when Trumbo is at DH against lefties that Alvarez should be in the lineup too? He does realized, does he not, that there’s only one DH per lineup, right? Where does he propose putting Alvarez? He doesn’t play outfield and he’s a defensive liability almost anywhere he plays. His natural position is 1B, but Davis, another Boras client, has that position locked down. Davis is much more reliable in the field even though Alvarez may be outhitting him. I’m trying to envision a scenario in which Alvarez is in the field at all, and all I can come up with is Davis in RF, Trumbo at DH, and Alvarez at 1B, but I can’t see that as a winner any more than I can Trumbo in RF.